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  2. These Pictures Will Help You ID the Most Common Bug Bites and ...

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    After the pain subsides, some may also become itchy, but most fly bites are innocuous. In rare cases, deer flies can pass on the bacterial disease tularemia (which can cause a painful ulcer), and ...

  3. Lipoptena cervi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lipoptena_cervi

    Red deer, elk (moose), roe deer, fallow deer, and Siberian musk deer are this fly's native hosts. In the United States, it has acquired hosts such as Canadian deer, white-tailed deer, and reindeer. [17] [18] There are stray records of bites on humans, dogs [21] and badger, and it will occasionally commit to the wrong host. [20]

  4. 11 common bug bites — and photos to help you identify them

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    On the other end of the spectrum, horse flies and deer flies use "blade-like" mouthparts to slash the skin before eating the spilling blood, which causes large, painful bites, Frye says. A fly ...

  5. 20 Common Pictures of Bug Bites and How to Identify Their ...

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    Ng says common flags of a sand fly bite red, itchy bumps that can develop into sores. "Clean the bites, and use anti-itch creams and antihistamines for itching," Dr. Ng suggests.

  6. Loa loa filariasis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loa_loa_filariasis

    The bite of the mango fly can be very painful, possibly because of the laceration style employed; rather than puncturing the skin as a mosquito does, the mango fly (and deer fly) makes a laceration in the skin and subsequently laps up the blood.

  7. Deer fly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deer_fly

    They are larger than the common housefly and smaller than the horse-fly. [5] [6] Deer flies lay between 100 and 800 eggs on vegetation near water or dampness in batches. During the larval stage, which lasts one to three weeks, they feed on small creatures or rotting organic matter near or in the water. [3]

  8. Tabanidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tabanidae

    Horse flies and deer flies [a] are true flies in the family Tabanidae in the insect order Diptera. The adults are often large and agile in flight. The adults are often large and agile in flight. Only female horseflies bite land vertebrates, including humans, to obtain blood .

  9. Loa loa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loa_loa

    The young larvae, or microfilariae, develop in horseflies of the genus Chrysops (deer flies, yellow flies), including the species C. dimidiata and C. silacea, which infect humans by biting them. After bites from these infected flies, the microfilariae are unique in that they travel in the peripheral blood during the day and migrate into the ...